TY - JOUR
T1 - Gambling preference, information risk, and the pricing of bank loans
AU - Alharbi, Samar S.
AU - Mamun, Md Al
AU - Atawnah, Nader
AU - Boubaker, Sabri
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - Our study explores the effect of local gambling preferences (LGP) on bank loan pricing, revealing that lenders impose significantly higher interest rates on firms situated in areas characterized by stronger gambling tendencies. Our results remain robust after conducting a series of sensitivity tests that account for firm-, county-, and loan-specific attributes, as well as several identification robustness checks. Specifically, our relocation analysis shows that firms moving to areas with higher (lower) gambling preferences experience higher (lower) costs of bank loans compared to control groups. Our channel analysis further reveals that local gambling preferences exacerbate a firm's information risk environment, as captured by poorer earnings quality, heightened earnings risk, and greater managerial concealment of bad news, resulting in higher borrowing costs. Finally, we observe that firms in areas with higher LGP encounter more stringent non-price loan terms. However, institutional ownership and the threat of takeovers significantly mitigate the adverse effect of LGP on bank loan pricing.
AB - Our study explores the effect of local gambling preferences (LGP) on bank loan pricing, revealing that lenders impose significantly higher interest rates on firms situated in areas characterized by stronger gambling tendencies. Our results remain robust after conducting a series of sensitivity tests that account for firm-, county-, and loan-specific attributes, as well as several identification robustness checks. Specifically, our relocation analysis shows that firms moving to areas with higher (lower) gambling preferences experience higher (lower) costs of bank loans compared to control groups. Our channel analysis further reveals that local gambling preferences exacerbate a firm's information risk environment, as captured by poorer earnings quality, heightened earnings risk, and greater managerial concealment of bad news, resulting in higher borrowing costs. Finally, we observe that firms in areas with higher LGP encounter more stringent non-price loan terms. However, institutional ownership and the threat of takeovers significantly mitigate the adverse effect of LGP on bank loan pricing.
KW - Cost of bank loans
KW - corporate governance
KW - information risk
KW - local gambling preference
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U2 - 10.1080/1351847X.2024.2404088
DO - 10.1080/1351847X.2024.2404088
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85205598138
SN - 1351-847X
JO - European Journal of Finance
JF - European Journal of Finance
ER -